*Progressivism, 1890-1920* Can politics fix social problems?

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*Progressivism, 1890-1920*

Can politics fix social problems?

I. The Roots of Progressivism

Essential Question: Can politics fix social problems?

Vocabulary: muckraker direct primary initiative referendum recall suffrage prohibition

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The Rise of Progressivism

Who were progressives and what did they believe caused social problems?

□ Collection of different ideas/ activities

□ Not an organized political movement with specific set of goals

□ Reaction to the effects of the era of rapid industrialization, immigration, and urbanization

□ Wanted to improve society (make progress, move society forward)

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Who were the progressives?

□ I.A. Urban, educated, middle-class Americans from both political parties

□ Thought government should take a more active role in solving society’s problems , but that government had to be fixed before it could be used to fix other problems.

□ I.B.

Strong faith in science and technology; thus, progressives believed using scientific principles could solve society’s problems.

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The Muckrakers

□ First to articulate progressive ideas

□ Were journalists who (I.C.) wrote about political corruption and social problems to expose wrongdoings

□ Teddy Roosevelt named them. Thought they were obsessed with corruption and scandal

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Lincoln Steffens

• Investigative reporter, Steffens’ book, The Shame of the Cities, dealt with political decay in

America.

• Reported on vote stealing and other corrupt political practices of political machines.

Charles Edward Russell

• Investigative reporter, Charles Edward Russell is perhaps best known, for his series of articles about the Beef Trust that were published as The

Greatest Trust in the World (1905)

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Reforming Government

How did progressives hope to make government more efficient and responsive to citizens?

□ Making government efficient

■ Frederick W. Taylor’s The Principles of Scientific Management

(1911): company could increase efficiency by managing time, breaking tasks down into small parts, and using standardized tools

■ II.A. Cities should use scientific techniques, with experts playing the major roles.

□ Political favors = inexperienced officials, inefficiency

□ Proposals to reform city government using experts to play a major role in managing the city. Another solution was to weaken political machines by having officials elected citywide instead of by neighborhoods.

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Reforming Government

How did progressives hope to make government more efficient and responsive to citizens?

□ Democratic Reform

■ II.B. Many believed that the key to improving government was to make elected officials more responsive and accountable to voters.

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Wisconsin’s Reform Governor

Robert La Follette of Wisconsin (3 term governor) --> became a “laboratory of democracy”

□ Attacked the way political parties ran their conventions. Party bosses controlled the selection of convention delegates and the nomination of candidates.

□ La Follette pressured the state legislature to pass a law requiring parties to hold a

direct primary, in which all party members could vote for a candidate to run in the general election.

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More Power to Voters

Direct Primary

Voters select party candidate

Initiative

Citizens place an issue before voters/legislature for approvals

Referendum

Voters approve/reject a law passed by legislature

Recall

Remove elected official before term is up

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State Reforms

□ More power to voters

□ III.C. The

Seventeenth

Amendment provides for the direct election of

Senators by the people.

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Woman Suffrage

What problems did social-welfare progressives attempt to reform?

□ III.A. The goal of the suffrage movement was achieving full voting rights for women.

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The Leaders….

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Early movement

□ American women first demanded the right to vote in 1848 at the Seneca Falls

Convention in New York

□ Also abolitionists, ending slavery became the priority

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Suffrage Movement

□ 1872 Stanton led a group of women to the polls in Rochester, NY where they insisted on voting

□ She was arrested for illegally casting a ballot in the presidential election

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Pushing for Federal Amendment was Difficult

□ First introduced in 1868

□ Stalled and was reintroduced in 1878 made it to committee

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Split into two groups

National Woman Suffrage Association

□ based in New York City

□ founded by Elizabeth Cady Stanton &

Susan B. Anthony in 1869

□ refused to endorse 15th amendment because it did not give women the ballot.

□ III.B. The NWSA wanted to focus on passing a constitutional amendment.

American Woman Suffrage Association

□ based in Boston

□ founded by Lucy Stone & Julia Ward

Howe in 1869

□ argued that once the black man was enfranchised, women would achieve their goal.

□ III.B. The AWSA wanted to win women’s rights at the state level

Groups united in 1890 to form the National American Woman

Suffrage Association (NAWSA) . Women needed right to vote to promote Progressive reforms and pass labor laws. Women began

Woman Suffrage, 1869-1920

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Suffrage at the Turn of the

Century

□ By the time of the NAWSA founding, women had won many rights

□ Married women could buy and sell property

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Suffrage at the Turn of the

Century

□ The beloved leaders of the movement, Stanton and Anthony died in

1902 and 1906

□ Did not see life’s work realized

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It was time for a new generation to take on the cause of women’s suffrage.

Next generation of leaders…

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A New Generation

□ One leader who emerged to reenergize the movement was

Carrie Chapman Catt

□ She headed the

NAWSA and focused on precinct by precinct political work

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A New Generation

□ Alice Paul learned aggressive tactics from suffragists in

England like hunger strikes

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□ The Congressional

Union (CU) headed by

Alice Paul called for an aggressive, militant campaign for

Constitutional

Amendment

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Protest at White House…

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□ Went to jail

□ Went on hunger strikes to protest their treatment

How did the NAWSA feel about the CU’ plan?

□ Their aggressive tactics would hurt the movement

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Impact of World War I

The entrance into WWI helped the women’s suffrage movement because many women helped with the war effort and did men’s jobs when they went to war

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Victory for Suffrage

□ III.C. the

Nineteenth

Amendment granted women the right to vote

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What progressive goals did suffragists believe they could achieve if women had the right to vote?

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Reforming Society

What problems did social-welfare progressives attempt to reform?

health & safety crime

Social Problems illiteracy child labor alcohol abuse

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Reforming Society

What problems did social-welfare progressives attempt to reform?

Child Labor

□ John Spargo’s 1906 book, The Bitter

Cry of the Children

□ IV.A. Laws set a minimum age and the maximum number of hours a child could work.

□ At the same time, many states began passing compulsory education laws, requiring young children to be in school instead of at work.

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Reforming Society

What problems did social-welfare progressives attempt to reform?

Health and Safety Codes

□ Workers’ compensation laws established insurance funds that employers financed.

Workers injured in accidents received payments from the funds.

□ Zoning laws for commercial, residential, or other development, thereby regulating how land and buildings could be used.

□ Building codes set minimum standards for light, air, room size, and sanitation and required buildings to have fire escapes.

□ Health codes required restaurants and other facilities to maintain clean environments for their patrons.

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Reforming Society

What problems did social-welfare progressives attempt to reform?

The Prohibition Movement

□ Settlement house workers, employers concerned about alcohol abuse. Temperance movement advocated people stop or moderate alcohol consumption.

□ 1874 Woman’s Christian Temperance Union

□ When the temperance movement began, it concentrated on reducing alcohol consumption. Later it pressed for prohibition.

□ IV.B. Prohibition laws banned the manufacture, sale, and consumption of liquor.

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Reforming Society

What problems did social-welfare progressives attempt to reform?

Progressive vs. Big Business

□ Sherman Antitrust Act in 1890,

□ Interstate Commerce Commission in 1887 to regulate railroads

□ Some advocated SOCIALISM:

■ What is socialism? IV.C. It is the idea that the government should own and operate industry.

■ Eugene V. Debs, American socialist candidate for president in 1912; most Americans believed in free enterprise

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How did Progressives hope to solve problems through political reform?

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Summary:

Government reforms improved city government, gave women the right to vote, and gave voters the direct primary. Societal reforms included child and adult labor laws, as well as Prohibition.

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What would a progressive muckraker try to reform today?

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17

th

Amendment

• The Senate of the

United States shall be composed of two Senators from each state elected by the people thereof for six years and each

Senator shall have one vote

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Progressive Legislation:

New Constitutional Amendments

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16

th

Amendment

• The Congress shall have power to lay and collect taxes on incomes, from whatever source derived, without apportionment among the several

States, and without regard to any census or enumeration.

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Tax Rates today…

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17

th

Amendment

• The Senate of the

United States shall be composed of two Senators from each state elected by the people thereof for six years and each

Senator shall have one vote

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18

th

Amendment

• Prohibited the production, sale, or transportation of alcoholic beverages in the

United States

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19th Amendment

• Women win the right to vote!!

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